Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting

Indonesia's economy continued to grow at a steady pace in the final quarter of 2012, taking full-year GDP growth to 6.2 percent. This was only a modest reduction from the 6.5 percent growth recorded in 2011, a resilient performance considering...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Economic Updates and Modeling
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
BID
GDP
NPL
WTO
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/03/17457457/indonesia-economic-quarterly-pressures-mounting
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16614
id okr-10986-16614
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE INVESTMENT
AGRICULTURE
ANNUAL GROWTH
ASSET PRICE
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS FLOWS
BALANCE SHEETS
BANK ASSETS
BANK BALANCE SHEETS
BANK INTERMEDIATION
BANK LOANS
BANKING SECTOR
BANKING SYSTEM
BID
BILL
BOND
BOND PRICES
BOND YIELD
BOND YIELDS
BORROWING COSTS
BUDGET DEFICIT
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
CAPITAL FORMATION
CAPITAL GOODS
CAPITAL GOODS IMPORTS
CAPITAL INFLOWS
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMERCIAL BANK LENDING
COMMODITY MARKET
COMMODITY PRICE
COMMODITY PRICES
CONSENSUS FORECASTS
CONSOLIDATION
CONSUMER LOAN
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CONSUMERS
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE
CONSUMPTION LEVELS
CORE INFLATION
COUNTRY EQUITY
CREDIT GROWTH
CREDIT QUALITY
CREDIT SPREADS
CURRENCY DEPRECIATION
CURRENT ACCOUNT
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
DEBT RATIO
DEBT REPAYMENTS
DEBT SUSTAINABILITY
DECENTRALIZATION
DEFLATION
DEMAND GROWTH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DISBURSEMENT
DISINFLATION
DOLLAR PRICE
DOMESTIC DEMAND
DOMESTIC DEMAND GROWTH
DOMESTIC MARKET
DRAG ON GROWTH
ECONOMIC ASSUMPTIONS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC DISRUPTION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
EMERGING MARKET
EMERGING MARKET EQUITIES
EQUIPMENT
EQUITY INDEX
EQUITY INDICES
EQUITY MARKETS
EXCESS DEMAND
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
EXPORT SHARE
EXPORT VOLUMES
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
EXTERNAL DEMAND
EXTERNAL FINANCING
EXTERNAL TRADE
FINANCIAL ASSET
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL MARKET
FINANCIAL MARKET PARTICIPANTS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL POSITION
FIXED CAPITAL
FIXED INVESTMENT
FOOD PRICE
FOOD PRICES
FORECASTS
FOREIGN CURRENCY
FOREIGN CURRENCY EXPOSURE
FOREIGN CURRENCY LENDING
FOREIGN CURRENCY LOANS
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FORMS OF CREDIT
GDP
GDP DEFLATOR
GDP PER CAPITA
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL TRADE
GOVERNMENT BOND
GOVERNMENT BOND YIELDS
GOVERNMENT BONDS
GOVERNMENT BUDGET
GOVERNMENT DEBT
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
GROWTH PROJECTIONS
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
HEDGES
IMPERFECT SUBSTITUTES
IMPORT
IMPORT DEMAND
IMPORT GROWTH
INFLATION
INFLATION RATE
INFLATIONARY PRESSURES
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INVENTORIES
INVENTORY
INVESTMENT FLOWS
INVESTMENT INFLOWS
INVESTMENT LOANS
INVESTMENT RATIO
INVESTMENT SPENDING
INVESTOR PERCEPTIONS
LABOR FORCE
LIQUIDITY
LIVING STANDARDS
LOCAL BANKS
LOCAL CURRENCY
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
MACROECONOMIC POLICY
MARKET CONDITIONS
MARKET PRICES
MONETARY POLICY
MORTGAGE
MORTGAGE INTEREST
MORTGAGE INTEREST RATES
NET EXPORTS
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
NPL
OIL DEMAND
OIL PRICE
OIL PRICES
OPPORTUNITY COST
OPPORTUNITY COSTS
OUTTURN
PORTFOLIO
PORTFOLIO INFLOWS
PORTFOLIO INVESTMENT
POTENTIAL INVESTMENT
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRICE INCREASES
PRICE INDICES
PRICE INFLATION
PRIVATE CONSUMPTION
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROPERTY VALUES
PRUDENTIAL REGULATION
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PURCHASING POWER
REAL GDP
REAL INVESTMENT
REAL PROPERTY
RECESSION
REPAYMENTS
RESERVE
RESERVES
RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE
RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGES
RETURN
SOLVENCY
STRONG CAPITAL INFLOWS
SUPPLY SIDE
SURPLUS
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH RATE
TARIFF INCREASES
TOTAL IMPORTS
TOTAL INVESTMENT
TOTAL OUTPUT
TRADE ACCOUNTS
TRADE BALANCE
TRADE BALANCES
TRADE DEFICIT
TRADE PATTERNS
TRADE POLICIES
TRADE POLICY
TRADE SURPLUS
TRADING
TRADING PARTNER
TRADING PARTNERS
TREASURY
TREASURY NOTE
TREASURY YIELD
TREASURY YIELDS
UNCERTAINTIES
UNCERTAINTY
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
VALUATION
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WEIGHTS
WORKING CAPITAL
WORLD PRICES
WTO
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
AGGREGATE INVESTMENT
AGRICULTURE
ANNUAL GROWTH
ASSET PRICE
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS FLOWS
BALANCE SHEETS
BANK ASSETS
BANK BALANCE SHEETS
BANK INTERMEDIATION
BANK LOANS
BANKING SECTOR
BANKING SYSTEM
BID
BILL
BOND
BOND PRICES
BOND YIELD
BOND YIELDS
BORROWING COSTS
BUDGET DEFICIT
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
CAPITAL FORMATION
CAPITAL GOODS
CAPITAL GOODS IMPORTS
CAPITAL INFLOWS
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMERCIAL BANK LENDING
COMMODITY MARKET
COMMODITY PRICE
COMMODITY PRICES
CONSENSUS FORECASTS
CONSOLIDATION
CONSUMER LOAN
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CONSUMERS
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE
CONSUMPTION LEVELS
CORE INFLATION
COUNTRY EQUITY
CREDIT GROWTH
CREDIT QUALITY
CREDIT SPREADS
CURRENCY DEPRECIATION
CURRENT ACCOUNT
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
DEBT RATIO
DEBT REPAYMENTS
DEBT SUSTAINABILITY
DECENTRALIZATION
DEFLATION
DEMAND GROWTH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DISBURSEMENT
DISINFLATION
DOLLAR PRICE
DOMESTIC DEMAND
DOMESTIC DEMAND GROWTH
DOMESTIC MARKET
DRAG ON GROWTH
ECONOMIC ASSUMPTIONS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC DISRUPTION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
EMERGING MARKET
EMERGING MARKET EQUITIES
EQUIPMENT
EQUITY INDEX
EQUITY INDICES
EQUITY MARKETS
EXCESS DEMAND
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
EXPORT SHARE
EXPORT VOLUMES
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
EXTERNAL DEMAND
EXTERNAL FINANCING
EXTERNAL TRADE
FINANCIAL ASSET
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL MARKET
FINANCIAL MARKET PARTICIPANTS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL POSITION
FIXED CAPITAL
FIXED INVESTMENT
FOOD PRICE
FOOD PRICES
FORECASTS
FOREIGN CURRENCY
FOREIGN CURRENCY EXPOSURE
FOREIGN CURRENCY LENDING
FOREIGN CURRENCY LOANS
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FORMS OF CREDIT
GDP
GDP DEFLATOR
GDP PER CAPITA
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL TRADE
GOVERNMENT BOND
GOVERNMENT BOND YIELDS
GOVERNMENT BONDS
GOVERNMENT BUDGET
GOVERNMENT DEBT
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
GROWTH PROJECTIONS
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
HEDGES
IMPERFECT SUBSTITUTES
IMPORT
IMPORT DEMAND
IMPORT GROWTH
INFLATION
INFLATION RATE
INFLATIONARY PRESSURES
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INVENTORIES
INVENTORY
INVESTMENT FLOWS
INVESTMENT INFLOWS
INVESTMENT LOANS
INVESTMENT RATIO
INVESTMENT SPENDING
INVESTOR PERCEPTIONS
LABOR FORCE
LIQUIDITY
LIVING STANDARDS
LOCAL BANKS
LOCAL CURRENCY
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
MACROECONOMIC POLICY
MARKET CONDITIONS
MARKET PRICES
MONETARY POLICY
MORTGAGE
MORTGAGE INTEREST
MORTGAGE INTEREST RATES
NET EXPORTS
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
NPL
OIL DEMAND
OIL PRICE
OIL PRICES
OPPORTUNITY COST
OPPORTUNITY COSTS
OUTTURN
PORTFOLIO
PORTFOLIO INFLOWS
PORTFOLIO INVESTMENT
POTENTIAL INVESTMENT
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRICE INCREASES
PRICE INDICES
PRICE INFLATION
PRIVATE CONSUMPTION
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROPERTY VALUES
PRUDENTIAL REGULATION
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PURCHASING POWER
REAL GDP
REAL INVESTMENT
REAL PROPERTY
RECESSION
REPAYMENTS
RESERVE
RESERVES
RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE
RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGES
RETURN
SOLVENCY
STRONG CAPITAL INFLOWS
SUPPLY SIDE
SURPLUS
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH RATE
TARIFF INCREASES
TOTAL IMPORTS
TOTAL INVESTMENT
TOTAL OUTPUT
TRADE ACCOUNTS
TRADE BALANCE
TRADE BALANCES
TRADE DEFICIT
TRADE PATTERNS
TRADE POLICIES
TRADE POLICY
TRADE SURPLUS
TRADING
TRADING PARTNER
TRADING PARTNERS
TREASURY
TREASURY NOTE
TREASURY YIELD
TREASURY YIELDS
UNCERTAINTIES
UNCERTAINTY
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
VALUATION
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WEIGHTS
WORKING CAPITAL
WORLD PRICES
WTO
World Bank
Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Indonesia
relation Indonesia economic quarterly;
description Indonesia's economy continued to grow at a steady pace in the final quarter of 2012, taking full-year GDP growth to 6.2 percent. This was only a modest reduction from the 6.5 percent growth recorded in 2011, a resilient performance considering the weak global environment and unsettled financial market conditions which prevailed for much of the year. Looking ahead, Indonesia should be able to maintain a solid pace of growth, but there is no room for complacency, as a number of pressures are mounting which could move the economy off this trajectory. Global economic uncertainties remain elevated, Indonesia s investment growth has moderated and, as highlighted in the December 2012 IEQ, the quality of domestic policies is increasingly in focus, particularly in the run-up to the 2014 elections. Even if growth of 6.0 to 6.5 percent is maintained, there is a risk that, without more progress on policy reform and implementation, the opportunity could be missed to boost growth at a time when the economy is benefiting from a growing labor force and the agglomeration effects of urbanization. Future appointments to key economic policy roles, following the nomination of the Minister of Finance as the next Governor of Bank Indonesia (BI), will also frame the macroeconomic policy environment going forward. The final quarter of 2012 remained challenging for many of Indonesia s major trading partners; growth in the US and Japan was flat and the Euro Area recession deepened, though growth in China firmed. Moving into 2013, global growth remains subdued but international economic conditions have turned somewhat more supportive for growth in Indonesia. Global industrial production is increasing at a modest pace, and global trade is expanding again, with broad-based increases for developing countries exports. Commodity prices have also generally posted modest gains since December, including those of some of Indonesia s key export products like copper, rubber and palm oil. The improved global economic data, and diminishing fears over the risks of extreme adverse scenarios in the Euro area, US and China, coupled with accommodative monetary policy in most high income economies, have been broadly supportive of financial markets. Global equity markets rallied in the final two months of 2012 and have generally held these gains, with some developed country equity indices at or near record highs in nominal terms. Emerging market sovereign credit spreads have widened so far in 2013 but still remain close to their tightest levels since the global financial crisis.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting
title_short Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting
title_full Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting
title_fullStr Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting
title_full_unstemmed Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting
title_sort indonesia economic quarterly, march 2013 : pressures mounting
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/03/17457457/indonesia-economic-quarterly-pressures-mounting
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16614
_version_ 1764433817331826688
spelling okr-10986-166142021-04-23T14:03:30Z Indonesia Economic Quarterly, March 2013 : Pressures Mounting World Bank ACCOUNTING AGGREGATE INVESTMENT AGRICULTURE ANNUAL GROWTH ASSET PRICE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BALANCE OF PAYMENTS FLOWS BALANCE SHEETS BANK ASSETS BANK BALANCE SHEETS BANK INTERMEDIATION BANK LOANS BANKING SECTOR BANKING SYSTEM BID BILL BOND BOND PRICES BOND YIELD BOND YIELDS BORROWING COSTS BUDGET DEFICIT CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL GOODS CAPITAL GOODS IMPORTS CAPITAL INFLOWS COMMERCIAL BANK COMMERCIAL BANK LENDING COMMODITY MARKET COMMODITY PRICE COMMODITY PRICES CONSENSUS FORECASTS CONSOLIDATION CONSUMER LOAN CONSUMER PRICE INDEX CONSUMERS CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE CONSUMPTION LEVELS CORE INFLATION COUNTRY EQUITY CREDIT GROWTH CREDIT QUALITY CREDIT SPREADS CURRENCY DEPRECIATION CURRENT ACCOUNT CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT DEBT RATIO DEBT REPAYMENTS DEBT SUSTAINABILITY DECENTRALIZATION DEFLATION DEMAND GROWTH DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DIRECT INVESTMENT DISBURSEMENT DISINFLATION DOLLAR PRICE DOMESTIC DEMAND DOMESTIC DEMAND GROWTH DOMESTIC MARKET DRAG ON GROWTH ECONOMIC ASSUMPTIONS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC DISRUPTION ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC OUTLOOK EMERGING MARKET EMERGING MARKET EQUITIES EQUIPMENT EQUITY INDEX EQUITY INDICES EQUITY MARKETS EXCESS DEMAND EXCHANGE RATE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION EXPORT PERFORMANCE EXPORT SHARE EXPORT VOLUMES EXPORTS EXTERNAL DEBT EXTERNAL DEMAND EXTERNAL FINANCING EXTERNAL TRADE FINANCIAL ASSET FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL MARKET FINANCIAL MARKET PARTICIPANTS FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SYSTEM FISCAL DEFICIT FISCAL POLICY FISCAL POSITION FIXED CAPITAL FIXED INVESTMENT FOOD PRICE FOOD PRICES FORECASTS FOREIGN CURRENCY FOREIGN CURRENCY EXPOSURE FOREIGN CURRENCY LENDING FOREIGN CURRENCY LOANS FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTMENT FORMS OF CREDIT GDP GDP DEFLATOR GDP PER CAPITA GLOBAL ECONOMY GLOBAL TRADE GOVERNMENT BOND GOVERNMENT BOND YIELDS GOVERNMENT BONDS GOVERNMENT BUDGET GOVERNMENT DEBT GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION GROWTH PROJECTIONS GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HEDGES IMPERFECT SUBSTITUTES IMPORT IMPORT DEMAND IMPORT GROWTH INFLATION INFLATION RATE INFLATIONARY PRESSURES INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL BANK INVENTORIES INVENTORY INVESTMENT FLOWS INVESTMENT INFLOWS INVESTMENT LOANS INVESTMENT RATIO INVESTMENT SPENDING INVESTOR PERCEPTIONS LABOR FORCE LIQUIDITY LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL BANKS LOCAL CURRENCY LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MACROECONOMIC POLICY MARKET CONDITIONS MARKET PRICES MONETARY POLICY MORTGAGE MORTGAGE INTEREST MORTGAGE INTEREST RATES NET EXPORTS NON-PERFORMING LOANS NPL OIL DEMAND OIL PRICE OIL PRICES OPPORTUNITY COST OPPORTUNITY COSTS OUTTURN PORTFOLIO PORTFOLIO INFLOWS PORTFOLIO INVESTMENT POTENTIAL INVESTMENT POVERTY REDUCTION PRICE INCREASES PRICE INDICES PRICE INFLATION PRIVATE CONSUMPTION PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PROPERTY VALUES PRUDENTIAL REGULATION PUBLIC INVESTMENT PURCHASING POWER REAL GDP REAL INVESTMENT REAL PROPERTY RECESSION REPAYMENTS RESERVE RESERVES RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGES RETURN SOLVENCY STRONG CAPITAL INFLOWS SUPPLY SIDE SURPLUS SUSTAINABLE GROWTH RATE TARIFF INCREASES TOTAL IMPORTS TOTAL INVESTMENT TOTAL OUTPUT TRADE ACCOUNTS TRADE BALANCE TRADE BALANCES TRADE DEFICIT TRADE PATTERNS TRADE POLICIES TRADE POLICY TRADE SURPLUS TRADING TRADING PARTNER TRADING PARTNERS TREASURY TREASURY NOTE TREASURY YIELD TREASURY YIELDS UNCERTAINTIES UNCERTAINTY UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT RATE VALUATION VALUE ADDED WAGES WEIGHTS WORKING CAPITAL WORLD PRICES WTO Indonesia's economy continued to grow at a steady pace in the final quarter of 2012, taking full-year GDP growth to 6.2 percent. This was only a modest reduction from the 6.5 percent growth recorded in 2011, a resilient performance considering the weak global environment and unsettled financial market conditions which prevailed for much of the year. Looking ahead, Indonesia should be able to maintain a solid pace of growth, but there is no room for complacency, as a number of pressures are mounting which could move the economy off this trajectory. Global economic uncertainties remain elevated, Indonesia s investment growth has moderated and, as highlighted in the December 2012 IEQ, the quality of domestic policies is increasingly in focus, particularly in the run-up to the 2014 elections. Even if growth of 6.0 to 6.5 percent is maintained, there is a risk that, without more progress on policy reform and implementation, the opportunity could be missed to boost growth at a time when the economy is benefiting from a growing labor force and the agglomeration effects of urbanization. Future appointments to key economic policy roles, following the nomination of the Minister of Finance as the next Governor of Bank Indonesia (BI), will also frame the macroeconomic policy environment going forward. The final quarter of 2012 remained challenging for many of Indonesia s major trading partners; growth in the US and Japan was flat and the Euro Area recession deepened, though growth in China firmed. Moving into 2013, global growth remains subdued but international economic conditions have turned somewhat more supportive for growth in Indonesia. Global industrial production is increasing at a modest pace, and global trade is expanding again, with broad-based increases for developing countries exports. Commodity prices have also generally posted modest gains since December, including those of some of Indonesia s key export products like copper, rubber and palm oil. The improved global economic data, and diminishing fears over the risks of extreme adverse scenarios in the Euro area, US and China, coupled with accommodative monetary policy in most high income economies, have been broadly supportive of financial markets. Global equity markets rallied in the final two months of 2012 and have generally held these gains, with some developed country equity indices at or near record highs in nominal terms. Emerging market sovereign credit spreads have widened so far in 2013 but still remain close to their tightest levels since the global financial crisis. 2014-01-27T18:48:04Z 2014-01-27T18:48:04Z 2013-03 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/03/17457457/indonesia-economic-quarterly-pressures-mounting http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16614 English en_US Indonesia economic quarterly; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling Economic & Sector Work East Asia and Pacific Indonesia